Originally posted by: nealh
when are the Dual Channel mobos be available????
Originally posted by: dajo
What happened to the 4500+ SoftSandra mem scores that GB was supposed to bring?
OCWB only overclocked with stock vcore and a 2.4B. They probably hit the limitation of that CPU at that particular vcore, not the limit of the GB MCH.Originally posted by: dajo
ocworkbench review of ASUS P4G8X Dual DDR board is up.
What happened to the 4500+ SoftSandra mem scores that GB was supposed to bring?
granite bay will make your P4S533 look like a complete POS!Originally posted by: dajo
I don't know... I'll have to see more reviews. They didn't do any overclocking did they? (can't really read it thoroughly now - too much going on here with kids, dogs, TV, etc.!).
I was hoping for a bit more of a bang. I have a 256MB stick of Corsair 3200C2 RAM - killer stuff, but I'm already over 2900 in SoftSandra so I can't see running out and spending another $112 for RAM and $150-$170 for the board just to get 300 more in SoftSandra.
This RAM pairing issue might be somewhat limiting economically except for the devout enthusiast (who isn't unemployed and has kids to feed like me!). If you don't happen to have the RAM already you're going to have to shell out some semi-serious bucks to upgrade.
I wonder if my TwinMos PC2700 and Corsair XMS 3200C2 would run together? Then I could just get the board.
Think I wait a while to see what the other DDR P4 boards have to offer.
Originally posted by: Toymaker
Dajo. The Granite Bay board results in Sandra (around 3200) are of two sticks of PC2100 (DDR 266)running at stock settings, unoverclocked and with memory running 1:1 synchronously. The results of your P4S533 (2900) are on a max overclocked system(around DDR 375 or so) running memory at 4:5 (150 MHZ FSB divided by 4 = 37.5, multiplied by 5 = 187.5 X 2 DDR = 375). On a Granite Bay board that overclocks well you would get much more than 3200. DC DDR for the desktop is in it's infancy. Consider what kind of performance you would get with PC2700, 3000, 3200, and 3500 speeds in DC DDR configuration plus aggressive CAS settings. And with GB, even on an unoverclocked system, the more aggressive CAS settings will boost performance even more.
An extra 100MB/s? Why would you buy a GB board and run it at stock speeds? With your 2.26 you could probably hit 170MHz FSB and that would give you 4100MB/s in Sandra. Even with your current 157MHz FSB you'd get 3800MB/s.Originally posted by: cmdrdredd
Sure my system is overclocked and I get a score of 3120/3129 in sandra, but why shell out the $200+ for the new mobo and another stick of memory just to get another 100 points? Not to mention that the memory is locked at 1:1 ratio which limits myoverclocking even further. My CPU can only go so far. Remember...not many CPUs can go to 170Mhz FSb and run stable without unlocking the multiplyer and the P4 is locked so you're stuck with what you get.
Originally posted by: THUGSROOK
Originally posted by: dajo
What happened to the 4500+ SoftSandra mem scores that GB was supposed to bring?
that was posted @ HOCP ~ probably faked
Originally posted by: TheCoz
An extra 100MB/s? Why would you buy a GB board and run it at stock speeds? With your 2.26 you could probably hit 170MHz FSB and that would give you 4100MB/s in Sandra. Even with your current 157MHz FSB you'd get 3800MB/s.Originally posted by: cmdrdredd
Sure my system is overclocked and I get a score of 3120/3129 in sandra, but why shell out the $200+ for the new mobo and another stick of memory just to get another 100 points? Not to mention that the memory is locked at 1:1 ratio which limits myoverclocking even further. My CPU can only go so far. Remember...not many CPUs can go to 170Mhz FSb and run stable without unlocking the multiplyer and the P4 is locked so you're stuck with what you get.
The whole point to GB is overclocking as far as I'm concerned. If you don't want to overclock then buy an i845PE or i850E rig. Another reason to go for a RDRAM rig is if (as you pointed out) you have a high-multiplier CPU (20x or more) or one that doesn't overclock very well. But with C1 P4 parts becoming more common then we'll see a lot more chips that can hit high FSB speeds. A GB board with a C1 1.8A, 2.26B or 2.4B could provide a high FSB overclock and a ton of memory bandwidth. GB boards will be great for overclocking but non-overclockers should probably pass and go for something cheaper.
The 1:1 memory ratio you get with GB isn't a limitation because it provides as much memory bandwidth as the FSB can handle. If fact 1:1 provides MORE memory bandwidth than the FSB can cope with - that's why you see 76% 'efficiency' scores in Sandra memory tests with DCDDR 1:1 or RDRAM 4x. Intel didn't put 4:5 or 3:4 memory ratios in GB because there's no point in doing so - the FSB isn't big enough for more memory bandwidth than you get with 1:1. Plus, 1:1 runs the memory and FSB clocks in sync and that means lower latencies, your latencies would be higher with 4:5 or 3:4.
Oh I agree - if you already have a top-notch DDR rig then you may not get enough of a performance boost to justify the cash. However, some people will spend a ton of cash just to get a 5% boost! If you've got an old system and you're in the market for a new rig then it'd probably be worth the extra money for a GB board too.Originally posted by: cmdrdredd
but there is no point to spending the money unless you benchmark your system all day. It's faster yes, but by how much? a few seconds here in this app, or a few FPS in this benchmark etc
get my point? for me and many like me with systems running overclocked DDR333 systems with High performance ram it isn't worth the money spent. Not to mention not every stick of DDR works in the system. I'm sure you can find a working one, but what about that Corsair you got? What if it doesn't work in this board?
Originally posted by: cmdrdredd
but they don't test corsair! damn them
I have no idea what chips my stick of corsair uses because if I remove the heatspreader I void my warranty on it.